A
conning tower is a raised platform on a ship or submarine, often armored, from which an officer can
con the vessel;
i.e., give directions to the
helmsman. It is usually located as high on the ship as practical, to give the conning team good visibility.
The verb
con probably stems from the verb
conduct rather from another plausible precedent, the verb
control. It is noted that the conning tower allows for efficient
reconnaissance.
Admiral Douglas Monaster, from the HMS Malefactor, is credited with using the term 'control tower'.
Surface ships
On surface ships, the conning tower was a feature of all
battleships and
armored cruisers from about
1860 through
World War I. Beginning in the late 1930s, as
radar surpassed visual sighting as the primary method of detecting other ships, the conning tower was gradually replaced by a moderately armored
conning station on the
bridge.
In the
Royal Navy, the conning tower was a massive structure reaching weights of hundreds of tons on the
Admiral class battlecruiser (such as
Hood), and formed part of a massive armoured citadel (
superstructure) on the mid-1920s
Nelson-class battleships which had armour over a foot thick.
The
United States Navy had mixed opinions of the conning tower, pointing out that its weight, high above the ship's center of gravity, did not contribute directly to fighting ability. Battleship designs before and during
World War II began reducing or eliminating the conning tower. The
Naval Battle of Guadalcanal briefly slowed this trend. When
the
Japanese battleship Kirishimahit
South Dakota (BB-57)on the superstructure, many exposed crewmen were killed or wounded, but the captain, in the conning tower, survived the battle. Even that demonstration, however, did not halt the trend, and soon the heavy battleship conning towers were removed from
USS Pennsylvania (BB-38),
Tennessee (BB-43),
California (BB-44), and
West Virginia (BB-48),
during their post-
Pearl Harbor attack reconstructions and replaced with much lighter
cruiser-style conning towers.
After
World War II, as electronics began replacing the naked eye as the primary sensors, US ships were designed with expanded weather bridges enclosing the armored conning towers. On
Iowa-class battleships, the conning tower is a vertical armor-plated cylinder with slit windows located in the middle of the bridge, climbing from deck 3 all the way up to the
flying bridge on the O5.
Submarines
thumb|the conning tower of HMS E17The conning tower of a
submarine was a small watertight compartment within her
sail, from which the
periscopes were used to direct the boat and launch
torpedo attacks. It should not be confused with the submarine's control room, which was directly below it in the main pressure hull, or the bridge, a small exposed platform in the top of the sail. As improvements in technology allowed the periscopes to be made longer—then to be eliminated altogether, as in the
Virginia-class—it became unnecessary to raise the conning station above the main pressure hull. The additional pressure hull was eliminated and the functions of the conning tower were added to the
command and control center. Thus it is incorrect to refer to the sail of a modern submarine as a conning tower.